Oxford Street could be a black-cab free zone ahead of Elizabeth line arrival

The long snaking lines of black cabs and red buses along the length of Oxford Street could become a rarer sight if plans by TfL to shake up the area are approved.

There have been calls for something to be done ahead of the launch of the Elizabeth line (nee Crossrail) at the end of 2018, as it is expected to see a big surge in shoppers.

At the moment, the street is mainly open only to taxis and buses, with some limited access to minicabs and delivery vans out of the daytime peak hours. The issue is how to expand pedestrian space, while ensuring that access is afforded to those who need mobility.

At the moment, the headline claim is that 41 percent of trips on Oxford Street are by bus, although 56 percent within Oxford Street are pedestrians.

With the recent changes to bus routes being implemented, there are already going to be fewer buses clogging up the streets.

While it’s hardly a surprise that a third of traffic on Oxford Street is black cabs, it is a surprise to learn that they carry just 2 percent of visitors.

While a percentage of that is going to be people with difficulty walking, realistically, Oxford Street is being choked by the rich who can afford a black cab for door-to-door shopping.

The consultation being launched is going to be delivered in several phases, with the initial one being likely to be limited to simply decluttering a stretch of Oxford Street. That means fewer street signs, seats, and possibly bins.

By some streets standards, the pavement is already fairly clear of clutter, so impact is likely to be minimal in the short term. Removing some poles and telephone boxes wont change much.

It also only covers the section between Oxford Circus and Selfridges department store.

In the long term, they plan to study whether buses and taxis can be shunted onto side streets, or removed altogether from the area.

What’s unlikely to happen though is total pedestrianisation of the street, which goes against a policy statement from the Mayor of London who said just last year that it could be traffic free by 2020.

That reversal could be due to strong pressure from local groups not to go ahead and ban traffic, although the retailers were generally in favour, there are residential areas right up against the shopping zone.

Attempts to pedestrianise the street have been considered since at least the 1970s, and the difficulties always found insurmountable. Maybe plans for an overpass for busses could be resurrected.

What’s not addressed in the consultation though is whether predictions of a surge in shoppers will be a short lived boost that slowly dies off as online shopping replaces it. The area is already being denuded of some sorts of retailers — who goes to Tottenham Court Road for electronics these days?

Will online shopping expand, as some expect, leaving high streets a mix of coffee shops and cafes, with click-n-collect retailers acting as mere showrooms for their online customers? Will improving Oxford Street save retailing, or be one stage towards an inevitable future as a long row of cafes?

Your assumption that black cabs are only for the rich shows how out of touch you really are. Companies that surge charge in rush hours are no cheaper, in fact cost more because their drivers have no idea where their going. Remember if your driver is using a sat nav so is every other sat nav Johnie clogging up that route. This is just TFL using an opportunity to undermine londons PREMIER taxi service.

By comparison to all the other options, bus, walking and tube — black cabs are the most expensive option, and used by people able to afford them.

No other public transport service that are allowed to use Oxford Street during the day have any sort of “surge charge” or use sat nav. You seem to be under the impression that uber cabs can use Oxford Street, which they can’t.

As for the idiot who said fewer black cabs the better ,uber outnumber black cabs 4 to 1 and they do use Oxford Street even though they shouldn’t. Perhaps if the idiots from tfl hadn’t allowed so many drivers to become mini cabs the roads might be a little bit clearer

I don’t believe in the demise of West End shopping. Oxford Street is part of a complex that includes Regent Street, Bond Street and Carnaby Street, and it’s also close to Covent Garden and places like Neal Street which has become a specialist shoe shopping area. This conglomeration is a huge attraction. The analogy with Tottenham Court Road is wrong because electronics have become commodities but clothes haven’t and won’t. People want vast choice and the ability to try on lots of different garments, and short of a step change in technology that won’t be possible on line.

The Crossriver tram to run from Peckham and Brixton in the south to Camden in the north but now with and additional branch from Holborn to Marble Arch or Notting Hill Via the pedestrianised Oxford Street with a depot in Peckham.